Buddhist
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Western
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Major
Events
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World Figures and Events
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120*
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6th
Century B.C.E. *
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Life
of Siddhartha
Guatama,
the historical Buddha: conventional dates:
566-486 B.C.E. (According to more recent research,
revised dates are: 490-410 BCE).
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Persian Empire founded by Cyrus the Great (550 B.C.E.)
Confucius (551-479)
Zarathustra (630-553)
Birth of Mahavira (550)
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20
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5th
Century
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First Buddhist Council at Rajagaha
(486) after the Parinirvana*, under
the patronage of King Ajatasattu.
The
Buddhist Canon as it exist
today was settled at this Council and preserved as
an oral tradition.
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Socrates (469-399)
Plato (427-347)
Battle of Marathon (490)
Greek-Persian Wars (490-479)
Partheon Built (438) |
144
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4th
Century
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Second Buddhist Council at Vesali (386)
about 100 year after the Parinirvana.
First schism of the Sangha occurs in which
the Mahasanghika school parts ways with the Sthaviravadins
and the Theravadins.
Non-canonical Buddhist Council at Pataliputra
(367)
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Aristotle (384-322)
Alexander the Great (356-323)
invaded India (327)
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244
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3rd
Century
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Reign of Indian Emperor Asoka
(272-231) who converts and establishes the Buddha's
Dharma on a national level for the first time.
Third Buddhist Council at Pataliputra (250)
under the patronage of Emperor Asoka about 200 years
after the Parinirvana. The modern Pali
Tipitaka now essentially complete.
Asoka's son and missionary Mahinda
established Buddhism in Sri Lanka (247)
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Great Wall of China (250)
Hadrian's Wall circa 3rd Century AD
Hannibal Barca (247?-183?)
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344
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2nd
Century
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Beginnings of Mahayana
Buddhism (20O).
Composition of Prajnaparamita
literature.
Historical record has it that two Buddhist missionaries
from India in 68 AD, arrived at the court of Emperor
Ming (58-75) of Han Dynasty.
They enjoyed imperial favour and stayed on to translate
various Buddhist Texts, one of which, The 'Sutra of
Forty-two Sections' continues to be popular even today.
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Buddhist monuments: Sanchi,
Amaravati, Bodhi Gaya, India.
(185-175)
Han Dynasty
in China
(206-220)
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444
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1st
Century
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Entire scriptural canon of Theravada
School was committed to writing on palm leaves
in Pali at the Aloka Cave, near
Matale, Sri Lanka (35-32)
Milinda-pañha or Questions
of King Milinda to Venerble
Nagasena.
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01BCE Mar 1, Start of the revised Julian calendar
in Rome.
Julius Caesar (100-44)
Virgil, Latin poet (70-19)
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544
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1st
Century C.E.*
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King Kaniska (78-101) convened the Fourth Buddhist
Council at Jalandhar or in Kashmir around 100 C.E.
(This is not recognized by the Theravadins).
Buddhism established in Cambodia 100 C.E and
in Vietnam 150 C.E.
Composition of Lotus Sutra and other Mahayana
Buddhist texts.
Buddhism enters Central Asia and China.
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Jesus of Nazareth (0-33 C.E.)
Destruction of Jerusalem and the second Temple: (70
C.E.)
The Buddha first represented in art as human form.
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644
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2nd
Century
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The Age of Indian Buddhist philosopher
Nargarjuna
(150) founder of the school of
Madhyamika ('the Middle
Way').
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Roman Empire
reaches the height of its power.
In 185 C.E, Shunga a Brahman general became the ruler
and the Shunga dynasty ruled for 112 years in India.
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744
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3rd
Century
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Expansion of Buddhism to Burma, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam,
and Indonesia.
The
Yogacara (meditation) school
was founded by Maitreyanatha
(3rd century).
Buddhist influence in Persia spreads through
trade.
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Three Kingdoms dynasty
(220265) Division into three states: Wei, Shu,
Wu. Many scientific advances adopted from India.
The Emperor Constantine converts to Christianity (312)
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844
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4th
Century
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Asanga (310-390) and his
brother Vasubandhu (420-500)
prominent
teachers of the Yogacara school of Buddhism.
Development of Vajrayana
Buddhism in India.
Translation of Buddhist texts into Chinese
by Kumarajiva (344-413)
and Hui-yüan (334-416).
Buddhism enters Korea (372).
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Gupta dynasty
exemplified by Chandra Gupta II (375-415) dominated
North Central India.
Saint Augustine
(354-430)
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944
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5th
Century
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Buddhist monastic university founded at Nalanda, India.
Buddhaghosa
composes the Visuddhimagga and major commentaries
in Sri Lanka.
Buddhism established in Burma and Korea.
Chinese pilgrim Fa-Hsien
visits India (399-414).
Amitabha (Amida) Pure Land
sect emerges in China.
Sri lankan Theravadin nuns introduce full ordination
lineage into China (433).
Mahayana Buddhism was introduced into
Java,
Sumatra, Borneo, mainly by Indian
immigrants.
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5th Century Anglo-Saxon Invasion of England
Earliest hospital in Sri Lanka (437)
Fall of the Western Roman Empire (476)
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1044
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6th
Century
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Bodhidharma founder of
Ch'an (Zen) arrives in China from India. (526)
Sui Dynasty in Chinese History (589-617)
beginning of Golden Age of Chinese Buddhism.
Development of T'ien-tai, Hua-yen, Pure Land,
and Ch'an schools of Chinese
Buddhism.
Buddhism enters Japan (538) becomes state religion
(594).
Buddhism flourishing in Indonesia.
Jataka Tales translated into Persian by King
Khusru (531-579).
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Prophet Mohammed (570-632)
The Age of Islamic Expansion
(630-725)
First pagoda built in China (600)
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1144
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7th
Century
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Construction of Potala Palace, Jokang and Ramoche
temples to house Buddha images (641-650)
Harsa-vardhana ruler
of a large empire in northern India from 606 to 647.
He was a Buddhist convert in a Hindu era.
Chinese pilgrim Hsuan-Tsang
(602-664) visits India.
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Islam sweeps across North Africa (700-800)
Tang dynasty, China (618-906)
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1244
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8th
Century
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Academic schools (Jöjitsu,
Kusha, Sanron, Hossö, Ritsu, and Kegon)
proliferate in Japan.
Great debate between Tibetan and Chinese
Buddhist schools.
Ch'an declared heretical in Tibet.
Nyingma School
of Tibet Buddhism established.
Borobudur Temple complex built
in Java.
Jataka Tales translated into Syrian and Arabic under
title: Kalilag and Damnag.
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Nara Period in Japanese history (710-784)
First monastery built in Tibet (Sam-ye) (749)
Moslem invasion of Central Asia (760)
Charlemagne (742-814)
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1344
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9th
Century
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Khmer kings build Angkor Wat,
the world's largest religious monument.
Tendai School
(founded by Saichö
(767-822) and Shingon
School (founded by Kukai: (774-835) appear in Japan.
Great Buddhist persecution in China (845)
Biography of Buddha translated into Greek by Saint
John of Damascus and distributed in Christianity as
"Balaam" and "Josaphat".
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Heian Period in Japanese history (794-1185)
First printed book, Diamond Sutra, China (868)
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1444
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10th
Century
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First complete printing of Chinese Buddhist Canon
(983), known as the Szechuan
edition.
Buddhism in Thailand (900-1000)
Islam replaces Buddhism in Central Asia (900-1000).
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Sung
Dynasty in Chinese History (960-1279)
1000 C.E The population at this time was about 200
million people in the world.
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1544
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11th
Century
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Conversion of King Anawrahta of Pagan (Burma) (1044-1077)
by Shin Arahan.
Atisha (982-1054)
arrives in Tibet from India (1042).
Marpa
(1012-1097) begins Kargyu
School of Tibetan Buddhism.
Milarepa (1040-1123)
becomes greatest poet and most popular saint in Tibetan
Buddhism.
The bhikkhu and bhikkhuni (monk and nun) communities
at Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka,
die out following invasions from South India.
Sakya School
of Tibetan Buddhism established.
Revival of Theravada
Buddhism in Sri Lanka and Burma.
Decline of Buddhism in India.
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1000-1100 There was a Confucian revival in China.
Edward the Confessor, English king (1042-1066)
Great Schism between Orthodox and Roman Catholic Churches
(1054)
1st Crusades (1096-1099)
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1644
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12th
Century
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Theravada Buddhism established
in Burma.
Hönen (1133-1212)
founded the Pure
Land School of Japanese Buddhism.
Eisai (1141-1215) founds the
Rinzai Zen School of Japanese
Buddhism.
In 1193 the Moslems attacked and conquered
Magadha, the heartland of Buddhism in India, and with
the destruction of the Buddhist Monasteries and Universities
(Valabhi and Nalanda) - in that area Buddhism was
wiped out.
Buddhism in Korea flourishes under the Koryo dynasty
(1140-1390).
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Omar Khayyam, Persian poet and mathematician (1044-1123)
1119 Bologna University founded in Italy; Paris University,
in France, is founded in 1150.
Kamakura Period in Japanese history (1192-1338)
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1744
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13th
Century
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Shinran
(1173-1263
) founds True Pure Land
School of Japanese Buddhism.
Dogen
(1200-1253) founds Soto Zen
School of Japanese Buddhism.
Nichiren
(1222-1282) founds school of Japanese Buddhism named
after him.
Mongols
converted to Vajrayana Buddhism.
Theravada Buddhism spreads to Laos.
Some Buddhist texts still being translated into Arabic,
in Persia.
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Francis of Assisi (1181-1226)
Magna Carta (1215)
Genghis Khan invades China (1215)
Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274)
Mongol conquest of China complete (1279)
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1844
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14th
Century
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Bu-ston collects
and edits Tibetan Buddhist Canon.
Rulers of the north (Chieng-mai) and northeast (Sukhothai)
Thailand adopt Theravada Buddhism (becomes state religion
in 1360).
Theravada Buddhism adopted in Cambodia and Laos.
Tsong-kha-pa (1357-1419)
Tibetan Buddhist reformer and founder of Dge-lugs-pa
(or Gelugpa, or 'Yellow
Hat') order.
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John Wycliffe (1328-1384) English theologian and biblical
translator.
China regains its independence from the Mongols under
the Ming dynasty (1368)
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1944
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15th
Century
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Beginning of Dalai
Lama lineage in Tibetan Buddhism.
In
Cambodia, the Vishnuite temple, Angkor
Wat, founded in the 12th century, becomes a Buddhist
centre.
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Development of printing in Europe
Leonardo DaVinci (1452-1519)
Columbus "finds" the new world (1492)
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2044
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16th
Century
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Tibet's Gelugpa leader receives
the title of "Dalai" from Altan Khan (1578).
"Great Fifth" Dalai Lama meets Qing Emperor
Shunzhi near Beijing.
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Martin Luther (1483-1546)
Protestant Reformation
Shakespeare, (1564-1616)
Galileo (1564-1642) |
2144
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17th
Century
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Control of Japanese Buddhism by Tokugawa
Shögunate
(the ruling feudal government) (I603-1867)
Hakuin (1686-1769)
monk, writer and artist who helped revive the
Rinzai Zen Sect in Japanese
Buddhism.
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Japan closes
the door to foreigners (1639)
Pilgrims reach America (1620)
Galileo recants (1633)
English Civil War (1642)
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2244
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18th
Century
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Colonial occupation of Sri Lanka, Burma, Laos, Cambodia,
and Vietnam.
King Kirti Sri Rajasinha obtains bhikkhus from the
Thai court to reinstate the bhikkhu ordination line
which has died out in Sri Lanka.
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1700s Age of Enlightenment introduces revolutionary
new ideas to Europe.
American independence (1776)
French revolution (1789-1802)
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2344
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19th
Century
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New sects begin to emerge in Japanese Buddhism.
Sri Lankan forest monks go to Burma for reordination
(1862).
First Western translation of the Dhammapada. (German-1862).
German translation of Lotus Sutra, 1852 and
pioneer Buddhist scholars: - Neumann and Odlenburg,
first German monk, Nyanatiloka.
First Chinese Temple in USA (San Francisco) (1853)
5th Buddhist Council in Mandalay, Burma (1868-1871)
where the text of the Pali Canon was revised
and inscribed on 729 marble slabs.
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Meiji Restoration in
Japanese history 1868, marking end of military rule.
1833 Abolition of slavery in British empire.
American Civil War (1861-1865)
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2444-2544
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20th
Century
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Buddhist Society of Great Britain, founded (1907).
Buddhist Mission Society
in Germany, founded (1903).
Taishö Shinshü Daizokyö edition
of Chinese Buddhist Canon printed in Tokyo (1924-1929).
Chinese
control of Tibetan Buddhism (1950).
Founding
of World Fellowship of Buddhists (1952).
Buddha Jayanti
Year, commemorating 2,500 years of Buddhism (1956).
6th Buddhist Council held at Rangoon, Myanmar (Burma)
(1954-1956).
Dalai Lama fleesTibet to India (1959).
Tibetan Buddhism spreads to western countries.
First Theravada Monastery established in USA (1966).
First Tibetan (Sakya) Centre founded in USA
(1971).
Tibetan texts collected, translated and disseminated
by Buddhist publishers 1960's.
H.H. Dalai Lama receives Nobel Peace Prize (1989).
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Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948)
WW I (1914-1918)
Russian revolution (1917-1922)
1919 Ernest Rutherford splits atom for first time.
WW II (1939-1945)
Cultural Revolution (China) (1966)
Pope John Paul II pardons Galileo (1995)
The Fall of the Berlin Wall, the Cold War ends. (1989)
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